Doing my small part for our planet
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Don’t get excited. This is not a big deal. I
might save a tree or two. I won’t be leading parades nor expect anybody to jump
on my bandwagon.
Three things
linked together in my head and this idea shot out the other end. (Please, do
not examine that statement too closely.)
Weather
devastations and our dying planet met up with my shrinking income met up with a
memory of childhood when I learned to iron clothes beginning with handkerchiefs
for the whole family, some embroidered in the corner, some floral, some
neckerchief in size, plaid or western print, silently shouted “Dad”, and a pile
of whites.
Like I said,
not a big deal. But I use a lot of Kleenex. Thinking about that sparked other
memories. In my childhood home, we never bought Kleenex or paper towels, things
many of us today buy in case lots. We used cloth, washable, reusable, almost
forever.
(I hesitate
to mention later years when cloth diapers froze dry in the winter on my
clothesline. That’s a whole different issue, possibly criminal in one way of
looking at it. Disposables are certainly handy, I admit.)
I asked Leo
to set up my conference-size project table in my living room while I rummaged
through a couple bins in my bodega for scraps of this and that.
I found a
lovely length of natural muslin, soft and pliable, perfect for handkerchiefs.
Further digging in bins brought forth a few pieces of colored muslin, pieces
from blouses already re-purposed.
One idea
triggered another. Soon I had fabric pieces in designated piles, ready for
projects in the coming days. Certainly I shall have handkerchiefs galore. If I hem
up a few more cloth napkins, I can strike paper towels from my grocery list. Count
another saved tree.
Since I am
using scraps leftover from former projects, I will still have odd sized
remainders of fabric. It is almost impossible for me to find filters for my
one-cup Melita coffee filter. I can easily whip out a small stack of cone
filters, easy to rinse, wash and re-use. One tree, check.
Other pieces
will be perfect to make more sachets for my dried lavender. Now I’m on a roll.
Speaking of
a roll, rolling around in the back of my mind is an idea for a picture quilt, a
farm scene, primitive, reminiscent of Grandma Moses, using minute scraps and
embroidery thread.
It takes
time to learn a new habit or to relearn an old one. Took me forever to remember
to grab my cloth shopping bags. Just like it took months to think ahead to grab
a mask (made by meself) when I leave the house. Most of us keep one hanging on
the door knob.
Becoming a
throw-away society came easily. Every new product to hit the shelves seemed to
find immediate acceptance. Maybe I am wrong. But we might just be forced to
regroup, to return to some of our old ways, not out of supply issues but out of
common sense.
And I might
as well pull out the other two bedsheets I’ve not yet cut into because they
would each make lovely long sleeved man-style shirts. One is a lilac cotton
flannel and the other has a pin-stripe pattern in subtle tans, both yummy
against my skin.
If I use
that length of multi-orange stripe for new chair cushion covers, those projects
should carry me through well into spring when my bucket gardening moves once
more into full swing.
I’m excited.
I’ll get started stitching handkerchiefs first, just as soon as I finish stitching
together the nightgowns I cut from a yellow cotton sateen sheet.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
December 16,
2021
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